The Neighborhood Playhouse was located at 466 Grand Street on
the Lower East Side of Manhattan.

photo: The
play to be performed on a Saturday evening, 29 Sep 1917, and on
Sunday the next day, by the Educational Committee of the Arbeiter
Ring (Workmen's Circle) was "Einzame Menshen," or "Lonely People," a
drama in five acts.

photos: courtesy of the New York Public Library Digital Gallery.

photo: The play to be
performed on 9 January 1916 is "Tsulieb glik [For
happiness]." It is being presented by the Educational Committee of
the Arbeiter Ring. This is a drama in three acts written by
Stanislaw Pshibishewsky.

Per the New
York Times, 25 Jan 1915:

"The Neighborhood Playhouse,
a novel theatre at 466 Grand Street, is to open with a biblical play, "Jephtha's
Daughter," which has been written for the occasion. The Playhouse was
built as an experimental theatre to carry on the dramatic and festival
work of the Henry Street Settlement. According to the backers of the
enterprise, it aims to be a community theatre, where the traditions of the
neighborhood can find artistic expression, where interesting productions
of serious plays and comedies as well as the lighter forms of
entertainment may be found."